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Off Grid Solar Power System Battery Bank Sizing! You MUST Do This!

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Country Living Experience: A Homesteading Journey

Country Living Experience: A Homesteading Journey

Жыл бұрын

Off Grid Solar Power System Battery Bank Sizing! You MUST Do This! OUR SOLAR EQUIPMENT...CLICK HERE: www.signaturesolar.com/?ref=c... $50 off on $500 Coupon: CountryLiv12 HARVEST RIGHT FREEZE DRYER: affiliates.harvestright.com/1... GROWERS SOLUTION: growerssolution.com/Countryli... DISCOUNT CODE: CountryLiving10. Help our family by shopping through this Amazon link: www.amazon.com/shop/countryli... Or Support Us With PayPal at countrylivingexperience@gmail.com
Get Your GrubTerra Treats Here: bit.ly/35CUV9Z Don't Forget Your Discount Code: CLE
Solar and Electrical Equipment:
EG4 6500ex Off-Grid Inverter signaturesolar.com/eg4-6-5k-o...
EG4-LL LiFePo4 Batteries: signaturesolar.com/eg4-ll-lit...
Growatt SPF 5000 ES Off Grid Inverter: signaturesolar.com/growatt-5k...
IMO PV Disconnect Box: signaturesolar.com/dc-disconn...
Nader 200Amp Breaker: signaturesolar.com/nader-dc-c...
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12 position electrical sub panel: amzn.to/3DVKZpZ
4 gauge THHN wire: amzn.to/3pYrXuB
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Copper Battery Ring Terminals: amzn.to/3CLRK0y
70 amp double pole breaker: amzn.to/3AvMVWp
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conduit as needed
mounting hardware as needed
Hardie backer board
Pike Industries Bus Bar: amzn.to/3R3bSzs
Solar Battery Calculator Sites:
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Time Codes: Our Test and Results 0:33, Our Loads 2:36, The Numbers! How Mush Batt Power Did We Use? 4:08, Calculating Your System (3 steps) 5:11, Our Mistake And Change 9:26
Tools Used for Our Solar Install:
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Items Used To Start Our Seeds:
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Granite Ware water bath canner: amzn.to/2CQquOn
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Greenhouse Film: amzn.to/2KG3Ahj
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Пікірлер: 518
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
EG4-LL LiFePo4 Batteries: signaturesolar.com/eg4-ll-lithium-battery-48v-100ahd/?ref=countrylivingexperience
@davefroman4700
@davefroman4700 Жыл бұрын
IF you talk to an electrician you can probably rig a timer to keep the water heater off at night. Or switch it out to on demand.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
@@davefroman4700 I am installing a heat pump water heater shorty. Probably in the next two weeks.
@rickybrenay6249
@rickybrenay6249 Жыл бұрын
We live in Florida and get cloudy / rainy days more then you would think. We figured our battery backup for 22kw system (ac is not on battery backup). Instead of adding more batteries we decided to double our solar panel for those cloudy days. This was cheaper and has worked out. Thanks for your videos.
@boblatkey7160
@boblatkey7160 Жыл бұрын
Well just remember to pay attention to the maximum charge rate of your batteries as people often overlook the fact that you can only push so much power into your battery at any given time. I have seen contractors void the warranty and destroy batteries because they drove too much current into them.
@SomeGuyNamedRoy
@SomeGuyNamedRoy Жыл бұрын
I always hated that Florida was the "sunshine state". Arizona gets much more sun!
@matthewhuszarik4173
@matthewhuszarik4173 11 ай бұрын
Good solution if you have the room. I have noticed it is vary rarely that I have zero production. Even most overcast days I still get significant production.
@matthewhuszarik4173
@matthewhuszarik4173 11 ай бұрын
I have 4kw solar with a single Power Wall. Here on the California coast they supply all my electricity needs the vast majority of time. I do have a heat pump backed up by a Natural gas furnace, gas range, gas hot water and gas dryer. As my appliances need replacement I am switching out for all electric. Next purchases are a heat pump hot water heater, and then an induction range. Presently I use only about a third of the power I produce. I don’t have room on my roof for anymore solar panels and being in a condo I don’t have an area to ground mount them. So I will have to work within my 4kw production envelope.
@dinosanchez8528
@dinosanchez8528 9 ай бұрын
You aint lyin about Florida, when I first moved to Leesburg I asked someone "Is it always this cloudy?" They said yes, it is.
@Jeff-yu9vf
@Jeff-yu9vf Жыл бұрын
I’ve been looking for a video like this for months and your the first to really use real life examples of what to expect great job 👏
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@Jophiel50
@Jophiel50 5 ай бұрын
This is by far the BEST video, because you actually brought out an appliance that is often used in a household and told us exactly how it would drain the battery…incredible and I am incredibly grateful for your channel! ♾💎✨
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 5 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@pheorrungurd8746
@pheorrungurd8746 Жыл бұрын
We live off a 15kw 24v system. It runs everything we need, but we only run a 110v water transfer pump, fridge, chest freezer, and lights everyday. We do have a microwave, rice cooker, Xbox and TV, but we only use those durring the day or when the generator is running. Our house is heated with a woodstove, and we use propane for a tankless water heater and stove/oven. Been living off grid for 5 years up here in Alaska, and started off with a 2kw battery bank, and slowly been upgrading as the years go by.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Cool. We are adapting a house that was already all electric. We don’t have any extras like vid game consoles or tv either.
@WisdomIsPrecious
@WisdomIsPrecious 8 ай бұрын
Great video no wasted time just pure analysis that’s what I like to see
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed
@ejflesher
@ejflesher Жыл бұрын
The best video I've come across summarizing solar power so far. Thanks so much.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
You're welcome
@caribecastaway6447
@caribecastaway6447 Жыл бұрын
Great that you point out people don't think about the loads they are using in the day time and having to charge the batteries at the same time.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@rongray4118
@rongray4118 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting. We are currently configuring an off grid power system in Northern Nevada. I have saved this video for future reference. We will have a generator back up so we will have ability to charge when the sun is not producing power through the solar array(s).
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 7 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@geneg7956
@geneg7956 Жыл бұрын
I installed an Emporia energy monitor system before installing solar. It gives a very accurate understanding of energy usage. I like that you can look at loads in amps, watts or cost. They make a 16 circuit or 8 circuit monitor but it does have sensors to monitor total panel loads.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Awesome. I'll check the Emporia out.
@jaredmh1978
@jaredmh1978 Жыл бұрын
@@CountryLivingExperience I know at my house with my emporia energy monitor my second highest using device behind ac was the water heater. So I have since replaced with a heat pump style water heater. I put it in my garage cools my garage down and costs a third to run over conventional should go a long way helping your batteries go further.
@cjcj6656
@cjcj6656 Жыл бұрын
It looks like the Emporia are smart devices. Smart devices of any kind can be controlled outside of the owners control.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
@@cjcj6656 I think you can opt to not enable features that would connect it to outside sources.
@geneg7956
@geneg7956 Жыл бұрын
My Emporia only monitors energy usage it doesn’t control anything. They do have smart devices but I don’t use them.
@banditdog1338
@banditdog1338 Жыл бұрын
You did a great job explaining I am currently putting together my solar system components and like you I don't have deep pockets it is a pay as you go project. But calculating load requirements can be a huge pain simply because as you stated there are so many variables we cannot control. But you did well explaining in layman's terms we can all understand. Thanks
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Glad it was helpful. I did order one of the Emporia monitoring systems so I can better understand the loads. I’ll do a review on it once I study my loads for a few weeks.
@daddio7249
@daddio7249 Жыл бұрын
I just ordered a 13000 watt system and have been watching these videos to gain information. My utility (FPL in Florida) installed a smart meter on my home several years ago. I can research my past usage. Last year in July I used 39 kWh a day. This year is much hotter and I am using 42 kWh a day. I am getting 11000 watts of panels so I should have enough power. I am getting 20 kWh of batteries so I will have to watch my night time usage.
@edkruzel
@edkruzel Жыл бұрын
Living in Dallas and building a cabin in Pineland. I plan on being completely off-grid. I really enjoyed your video.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Awesome. Glad it was helpful.
@dmark6699
@dmark6699 Жыл бұрын
Having lived in Michigan and Western Washington states I can say yes very cloudy and rainy.
@rodneyross5282
@rodneyross5282 Жыл бұрын
Great information for sure. Being East Texas bread, born and raised Texarkana. However living on lake Whitney, I still make the trip to Signature Solar to pick up my solar needs. You living very close by about 45 minutes I believe. Thanks for the great video, have a wonderful week. God Bless in all you do.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Awesome. God bless y'all as well.
@CncObsession
@CncObsession Жыл бұрын
Are you solar on the lake? I am near Juniper Cove and contemplating the jump.
@pray4Liberals
@pray4Liberals Жыл бұрын
I am 20 min north of New Boston. It is a real blessing to live so close to Signature Solar.
@MarkPrince1317
@MarkPrince1317 Жыл бұрын
Wawoo brother your system is so amazing and thank you very much for shearing very helpful knowledge Best regards from Philippines 🇵🇭
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Salamat
@lambobuilder
@lambobuilder Жыл бұрын
Appreciate your updates. Just went live with my system yesterday with two EG4 6500 inverters like yours. Have 12,800 watts of panels and 6 - EG4 batteries, 30,700 watts. I do have grid die into inverters and first night batteries were drained and went to bypass to grid. Of course, no sun next day. Did read where batteries need to be charged from external source before using to be functional, I did not know. Charged overnight and will try again today. Do have sun. Again, appreciate the detailed explanations and the reference material.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Awesome that you got your system up and running!
@jacquesdutron9954
@jacquesdutron9954 Жыл бұрын
Thx a lot for all your efforts & congratulations on your set up. I only needed 2 batteries, but I decided to get 4 anyway. Because I got the best. The Discover AES 42-48-6650 gives me 6,650 amp per hour per battery. I will never run out of amp
@fasnuf
@fasnuf Жыл бұрын
Great video. Really helps me to understand how weak my system is even for a backup to my gas generator. Need mo powa
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Certainly always need mo powa.
@designdepartment841
@designdepartment841 Жыл бұрын
Beautifully done as always! - SS
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thanks again!
@zacharysmith7844
@zacharysmith7844 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video. Really good information! Thank you !
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@mikemcdonald5147
@mikemcdonald5147 Жыл бұрын
we have a switch to turn on our hot water heater. We turn it on 15 mins before taking a shower and its hot and good for about two showers. it also lengthens the life of your hot water heater.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Nice modification
@oilycare1820
@oilycare1820 Жыл бұрын
We use a hybrid water heater, which uses a heat pump when enabled. pulls about 500 watts when heating water. Made by Rheem.
@RenickWalker-il4ge
@RenickWalker-il4ge 2 ай бұрын
Best Video I,ve seen about explaining these things BEST!!! Awesome work i will deff subscribe. I have a 6kw system here in Jamaica 2 Lithium batteries each 7.5kw 150 AH.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 2 ай бұрын
Thank you. Glad it was helpful.
@KevinCarroll52773
@KevinCarroll52773 Жыл бұрын
Well done explanation, the key things I picked up on is that your very continuous about what’s was running. Can’t just use the power as if it was grid.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Yes, that is key. It is a totally different experience from the grid for sure.
@lexkruit6775
@lexkruit6775 Жыл бұрын
I love your channel! Have a blessed day.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! God bless you as well.
@Doc1855
@Doc1855 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. There’s a company here in the PNW that is working on developing solar roof “shingles”, so that your total roof becomes solar panels.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
You're welcome
@HarrisRanch
@HarrisRanch Жыл бұрын
Tesla does that already
@MyWasteOfTime
@MyWasteOfTime Жыл бұрын
I would encourage you to look into Emporia Energy (or something similar) to monitor each breaker for energy use. I love mine and it allows me to track each circuit in my system!
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Awesome. Thank you. Someone else mentioned that today as well.
@andrewhofmann5453
@andrewhofmann5453 Жыл бұрын
Just installed one of those myself this week. Love the results!
@jesseballard4753
@jesseballard4753 Ай бұрын
Finally a specific number for how much power a house uses. Thank you
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Ай бұрын
You’re welcome
@AdamDeLay07
@AdamDeLay07 Жыл бұрын
Great explanation! I've had the Sense Utility Monitor installed for a few years now and that helps give a good usage of daily power requirements without having to look at all the energy stickers on all the appliances. I was able to take that information and have my bank sized to be able to power my home for 24 hours with no solar. Of course, like you said, when you can GET MORE BATTERIES, so I'm working on getting close to what you have for capacity, but I imagine you're taking your own advice and will be growing your bank even more. Keep up the great work!
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thanks. I'll check out that Sense monitor. Always keep buying more ;-)
@SkyNoris
@SkyNoris Жыл бұрын
In my system I use a shunt to monitor all power going in and out. It gives me an extremely accurate idea of what my usage is and will be in the future. Along with the charge level of my battery bank. Right now, I'm averaging about 20KW of power usage per day. I usually can produce a little more than that per day with my solar arrays. Hopefully this continues for 31 more days 😆
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
I have thought about getting one but how accurate is it. Is it going to tell you what appliance is drawing what load at what time, etc?
@SkyNoris
@SkyNoris Жыл бұрын
@Country Living Experience: A Homesteading Journey Very accurate. You can see both live and past data. This gives you a timeline for when devices are turned on. If you know how many watts a device uses, it's super easy to track when it was turned on and for how long. If you don't know how much power something uses, no problem. Just turn it on while monitoring your power output. I use a victron smart shunt. I highly recommend it.
@boblatkey7160
@boblatkey7160 Жыл бұрын
Actually to say that correctly you are averaging 20 kWh of energy usage per day. Power is instantaneous consumption and energy is power consumption overtime.
@Flowing23
@Flowing23 Жыл бұрын
Good evening, happy Christmas to you. I have to say this video was excellent . You really clearly identified all of the potential issues a new system builder will encounter. Your explanation of calculations for batteries and panels was excellent. Thank you for taking the time to put together such a clear and concise video covering all the basics.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Merry Christmas! Glad the video was helpful and informative.
@oreh350
@oreh350 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video! Very nice explanation!
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
You’re welcome
@googlinstuff8910
@googlinstuff8910 2 ай бұрын
can't wait to go off grid!
@ktmrider7592
@ktmrider7592 Жыл бұрын
I learn a ton from your videos. Just installing my system now. I have 20 solar panels and luckily a micro hydro system that makes about 3kw continuous . I have 6 LifePo4 batteries. Hopefully I’m good to go
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Awesome
@av1204
@av1204 Жыл бұрын
3kw continuous you could run a mansion with a heated pool.
@WilliamIraWoodIV
@WilliamIraWoodIV Жыл бұрын
@@av1204 I would assume 3 kilowatts PER HOUR, NOT 3 kilowatts per second/continously.
@av1204
@av1204 Жыл бұрын
@@WilliamIraWoodIV 3 kw per hr is still 72kwh a day. My all electric house uses 22 kwh a day.
@WilliamIraWoodIV
@WilliamIraWoodIV Жыл бұрын
@@av1204 Many areas in the contiguous 50 states only get 5 hours, on average, of prime sunlight that produces electricity from solar panels. So 3 kwh X 5 is only 15 kwh of power generation per day. ;)
@PaulOfPeace54
@PaulOfPeace54 Жыл бұрын
I would make sure the panels had two positions. One position for winter when the sun is lower in the sky. I would have my HW heater, clothes dryer, and cooking powered by propane or natural gas.
@mikemcdonald5147
@mikemcdonald5147 9 ай бұрын
We had a timer switch installed on our hot water heater. We have a family of three and we let it run for four hours every day. That gives us enough hot water for all to take showers and wash dishes. If we need more we can change it to be on longer or shorter.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 9 ай бұрын
Cool
@Wendy-xe4gk
@Wendy-xe4gk 12 күн бұрын
Very clearly expressed. Thanks!
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 12 күн бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@MJ-ge6jz
@MJ-ge6jz Жыл бұрын
Just starting my OFF GRID life, have a small solar system for my Tiny house. 10Kwat of starage and 1.2Kwatts of panels., that dosen't cut it. I suspect I will need 20 Kwatts of storage and 6 Kwatts of solar panels for those winter days. My night time load is about 1.5 Kwatts. I do have a small electric watter heater and I placed a power switch and I only turn it on during the day for about 20 min as needed; works well. I will check out those calculators you suggested. Thx!
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
You're welcome. Keep building that system up.
@justinbowles4671
@justinbowles4671 Жыл бұрын
Very good video! Thanks for sharing
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you and you’re welcome.
@JohnSmith-tx3ys
@JohnSmith-tx3ys 11 ай бұрын
AC, heat, and water heater are the biggest hits to your daily energy use. I only have 11kwh of lifepo4 batteries. However it’s just for outages, we are on grid. We only need it for cooking and keeping freezers running.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 11 ай бұрын
They sure are the bulk of the loads. Glad you have a good backup for your critical items.
@diysolaradventures7894
@diysolaradventures7894 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget I'm completely off-grid here in northwest Ohio with only five 355w panels I'm running on 16 120ah lithium iron phosphate cells in 24v 5760wh now I have 8 277ah lithium cells on they way and then another 8 eventually because I want 16 of those 277ah cells as well to add to what I already have..Oh and I'm loving my new Senville Mini Split I talked to you about 😉
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Glad the Senville is working out for you.
@diysolaradventures7894
@diysolaradventures7894 Жыл бұрын
I think the news said this pass winter was the most cloudy winter on record for Michigan & Ohio U right about going days on in with no solar I was to mad lol I ended up using my generator 4-5 diff times over the course of the whole winter & I'm in Toledo Ohio
@michaelgnaedinger5915
@michaelgnaedinger5915 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for a very informative overview 😊
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 7 ай бұрын
You're welcome
@ShaneS071
@ShaneS071 Жыл бұрын
try adding an Emporia Vue gen 2 to your distribution panel to monitor up to 16 circuits works great
@nobznezz
@nobznezz Жыл бұрын
All I can say objectively is, Well Done Sir!
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you kindly!
@Sanwizard1
@Sanwizard1 Жыл бұрын
I agree using an Emporia monitor is critical to figure out your loads.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Got one on the way. Thanks for all the viewers that have suggested it.
@HippocratesGarden
@HippocratesGarden Жыл бұрын
insulation insulation, insulation. around the water heater, fridges, and freezers (just don't block airflow to the compressor), Not going to make a huge difference at one time, but every bit helps.
@EdensHollow
@EdensHollow 22 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for your videos! We are beginning our off-grid journey also in East Texas and doing so slowly to keep things affordable! Appreciate the encouragement to build our solar system over time. I know nothing about electrical and researching this has had to come in waves so it doesn’t hurt the brain too much 😂 What have you found as your average days of autonomy in summer and winter so far?
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 22 күн бұрын
You’re welcome. Glad we could help. Weather is such a factor in days of autonomy that is hard to nail down. It fluctuates so much all the time.
@arthurhammeke8296
@arthurhammeke8296 Жыл бұрын
For energy monitoring I got Emporia Smart Home system. I still need to get one for my main panel and one for my workshop that's hybrid solar system. Another thing that we did was got a hybrid solar water heater. Uses 400 watts most of the time to heat the water. The main energy user is our whole house heat pump - non-geo thermal. 2 ton at 4k watts heating about 2k cooling. And yes, it is a cycle of getting more batteries and more panels. Till the system has grown to acceptable off-grid for the majority of the time. Regardless, the electric bill will decrease each time.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
I am going to get an Emporia soon. I have a heat pump water heater that I still need to hook up and do a video on.
@peejay3148
@peejay3148 5 ай бұрын
The explanation I crave! Thanks.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 5 ай бұрын
You're welcome
@JohnBaker3000
@JohnBaker3000 11 ай бұрын
Excellent!
@isovideo7497
@isovideo7497 10 ай бұрын
I turn off the hot water heater during a blackout. We use electric kettles to get hot water as needed. This saves us about 10KWh per day.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 10 ай бұрын
Good call
@SetchiPaunda
@SetchiPaunda Жыл бұрын
That set up is very familiar. very nice
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Cool
@carriejensen9772
@carriejensen9772 Жыл бұрын
I love all your videos by the way
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you kindly
@ai6mk897
@ai6mk897 8 ай бұрын
Hi, very nice video. Couple of suggestions. 1. I like to monitor my usage using "SOLAR ASSISTANT". It runs on a Raspberry Pi and provides a timeline graphing of solar generation and loads. It's relatively easy to figure out what appliance is on at a particular time. 2. I think for most people 3 days of autonomous power yields a battery which is unaffordable. So perhaps you might define two or more modes depending on the weather forecast. Modes could be abundant solar, and no solar. If you know that tomorrow or the next day will fully charge your batteries you may want to keep all 3 mini-splits on. But if you know it will be overcast, switching to two or even one might be more appropriate. Of course a generator may be the only source of power for those weeks when there is no solar.
@rklauco
@rklauco Жыл бұрын
Friendly advise - grab a few Tasmota energy monitoring plugs. Whatever you want, you can measure. One simple HTTP call and short script and you have online monitoring using csv text file.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the heads up
@alanblyde8502
@alanblyde8502 Жыл бұрын
well explained mate, were in the same position, we all seem to be time poor to get it all done
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@treemaniscool
@treemaniscool Жыл бұрын
highly recommend getting a heatpump water heater they are insanely efficient
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Absolutely! I have one waiting to be installed. A Rheem performance platinum.
@BusGreaseMonkey
@BusGreaseMonkey Жыл бұрын
The shorter days are starting to be noticeable on our power Opposite of you i have way more solar but less batteries. I keep adding batteries. Over 20kw of panels, 20kw inverters, and only 35kw of batteries. We hit 100% nearly everyday there is even partial sun. Two hours of mid day sun and that’s a good day to do laundry. Cloudy days not to bad but dark rainy days when it rains all day wow those are pitiful. Try adding a insulation wrap cover to your water heater that will help it not need to turn on overnight. It’s amazing the way we learn to use energy based on sun. We started in an rv so we would turn our water heater off at night. Still hot water in the morning anyway then flip a switch back on for it when the morning sun is up.
@craftymulligar
@craftymulligar 6 ай бұрын
You need insulation for hot water heater....then a timer. Even the grid i had a timer it was a hour a day for me so i could take a shower. It also had a bypass if hour wasnt enough. You really need one for an solar power solution.
@jeffh3906
@jeffh3906 3 ай бұрын
Good video…thanks 👍
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 3 ай бұрын
You're welcome
@mr_scruffles_ytminecraft1110
@mr_scruffles_ytminecraft1110 7 ай бұрын
I HIGHLY recommend in buying 2.5-3.5x more solar KWH then what your daily consumption is to Help maintain enough energy being put into your battery bank storage and into your home that even when cloudy theres still enough energy getting to your home use and keeping your batteries charged
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 7 ай бұрын
That is partially what I was alluding to.
@cseresznyessandor237
@cseresznyessandor237 10 ай бұрын
a very nice video. but always in my mind how many kwh could win in winter in harsh conditions.For example i ve got a 10 kwh solar generator could it be generated at the worst situations in wintwer every mont at least 300 kwh that is our energy monhly needed.
@ewitte12
@ewitte12 Күн бұрын
Our heat is gas, electricity is pretty low in the winter. The AC is the killer.
@etiennelouw9244
@etiennelouw9244 5 ай бұрын
I am a pensioner in South Africa where we have frequent power outages called "load shedding" so I put together a 24v 50ah lifepo4 battery with a 100v 20a solar charge controller and a 3000w inverter and 400w solar panels to help with my fridges and freezer during the day, at night I only run the 2 small fridges for about 4 hours during load shedding. Now I am planning a 24v 3000w system with a 24v 100ah lifepo4 battery and 920w solar. Later I plan to upgrade this second system batteries to 24v 200ah and the again to 300ah. I happen to be an electrician as well.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 5 ай бұрын
That is wonderful. Glad you are continuing to build your system. I know the hardships in South Africa with electricity. I have friends who live there.
@travelandfood9625
@travelandfood9625 9 ай бұрын
There are different ways you can it. I have a separate box set up for each individual room. Easier to keep up with for me. The only thing constantly running is my refrigerator, my lights are so efficient that they could run all day and night, I don't need ac because the way I have it insulated it stays in the 70s even in the Florida summers.
@darecofreedomfarm3
@darecofreedomfarm3 Жыл бұрын
I have been off grid for 14 months. We are all electric, including water well. So far our average daily use is 8.46kwh. Average daily generation is 9.81 KWh Max in one day generated is 25.6 kWh Max used in one day is 22 kWh. We heat with wood mostly but use the AC to cool. My arrays are two 15x240w for a total of 7.2 kw Battery capacity is 12.8 kWh I use low voltage relays to run my hot water heater ( I put 1500 watt elements in them) only at float voltage or higher, and to eliminate loads based on necessities. So most loads where energy can be stored are only on when charging. We usually start the day above 65% unless we run the AC all night. I run a LF 6 kw 230v split phase inverter! Get more panels and run most your loads during daylight hours and you won’t need to buy as many batteries.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
I believe the difference was that I was heating with the mini-splits. The draw for heating is twice that of cooling. I run most large loads like dryer or stove during daylight hours. I am changing out the water heater soon for a heat pump water heater.
@dennydewaal137
@dennydewaal137 Жыл бұрын
If you install a propane tankless water heater on your electric water heater cold inlet , you will make it in the winter( 60c inlet ) whit your battery’s.. just turn the ignition switch of in the summer and let cold water run true it ..
@lindaferguson593
@lindaferguson593 Жыл бұрын
I have 2 banks of 6 eg4 batteries (not LL). Needing a wiring diagram to connect my 500A smart shunt to them. Banks are parallel to parallel. Pairing off on the two negatives. Would i need two smart shunts? One for each battery bank? Thanks.
@sj6404
@sj6404 Жыл бұрын
Super video. Very useful.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@jamesharlow1406
@jamesharlow1406 Жыл бұрын
Sense Home monitoring unit tracks KW usages and finds devices as it runs.
@shaybee22
@shaybee22 Жыл бұрын
Good info, I literally have the same system you have as I have modeled it after Will Prowse's system. To aid in faster charging during the day I picked up 4 of EG4's solar Mini splits and plan to use them to do my cooling/heating during the day so as much energy as possible from the panels goes in to charging up the batteries. But I am in FL so it will most likely be 90% cooling not heating. I did get the solar DC/AC 120V ones as it will be easier for me at least to wire them to 120 than 240 for use at night. I am also going to add a solar water heater element or possibly add a small second 30 gallon water heater with a solar heating element and switch between the two with bypass valves because during the summers here we really barely use any hot water, just for dishes and laundry. Showers are luke warm.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Good thinking on the DC mini-splits for saving on daytime load draw. I am thinking that they are using the same amount of power from the panels though. Aren't they still robbing your total from the panels and in turn robbing the amount the panels are sending to the batteries?
@shaybee22
@shaybee22 Жыл бұрын
@@CountryLivingExperience They are each on their own separate panels, 4 each per mini split. so they are completely separate as far as solar from the main panels. At night however they will be drawing from the battery bank :/
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Ah, I understand.
@iiinsaiii
@iiinsaiii Жыл бұрын
Great video. That is so true about having enough solar to fully charge up your batteries in a few hours. But my question is, what do you do if it’s raining for a few days? That’s when you need a plan B. My plan B is having a few of Signature Solar 48v 18a chargers and run them off my gas generator. Well right there is another problem. If you’re going to use a gas generator your going to have to store gas and treat it, so it will last for a year. Then you need to figure out, how much gas you want stored. ( I have 30 - 5 gallon Jerry cans. Don’t judge me 😂. ) Then I ran into a little problem. I have 3 of those 48v 18a chargers. I have an 8500watt whole house generator. I try running the chargers off the generator, but every time I run just one charger, the outlet keeps tripping. But I have two small Ryobi 1800w generator and each generator runs one charger for a little over 6 hours. Now that’s the problem that your going to run into. Having a generator or generators to run your chargers. I’ve been doing my test now and not later in a middle of something bad. What would you do for a plan B
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Leave some Jerry cans for the rest of us...😂😉. Those chargers have a lot of amps running through them. Good you have several small generators.
@diysolaradventures7894
@diysolaradventures7894 Жыл бұрын
Hopefully I can add five more panels by this spring or summer from SanTan Solar honestly I wish i could just pack everything up and move from up here in Ohio
@tommyeddie5599
@tommyeddie5599 Жыл бұрын
You should install a timer on your water heater. Keeps the water heater off while you are sleeping
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Cool. I am switching it out for a heat pump water heater soon.
@fullsleevetats
@fullsleevetats 3 ай бұрын
According to my Emporia Vue, my home consumes between 37kW and 42kW/day, every day (about 1,400kW/month). I would be draining and depleting this entire rack of batteries Day 1, and then take 7 days of 3-4 solar hours per-day to fill it back up again. Using the calculator at the altestore, it shows I will need 48 x 500W panels just to cover my current monthly load. I don't have the rooftop acreage to even come close to bring in the 23kW system needed to cover that usage.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 3 ай бұрын
You would only drain your entire rack if you had zero input from the panels. i.e. in a multi-day thunderstorm. Not sure why it would take you so long to charge them unless you only have a tiny amount of panels. You need to have enough panels to supplement your loads and charge in a reasonable amount of time. Keep adding panels up to the point where your inverters can't handle anymore input voltage. 48 is probably overkill but you should try to start with 20. Also, try to manage your loads on the cloudy days better. i.e. postpone laundry, etc.
@HuntersLaptop-xe5iy
@HuntersLaptop-xe5iy Жыл бұрын
Put the Water Heater on a Timer, it can be off at Knight.
@michaelfranks341
@michaelfranks341 Жыл бұрын
Right now Im using 17-22 kwh a day in 24 hours in a 4600 sq ft house in Northern Virginia. Your house is using over double what I use....
@childrenofthegoddess
@childrenofthegoddess 4 ай бұрын
Great video
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 4 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@av1204
@av1204 Жыл бұрын
sense makes easy to use monitor. also get hybrid hotwater heater.... saves 2-3 kwh a day.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Yep, I have a heat pump water heater waiting to be installed. Been sitting here for a month...lol.
@minutemanprep
@minutemanprep Жыл бұрын
Really nice video
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@trumpingtonfanhurst694
@trumpingtonfanhurst694 Жыл бұрын
I added mine up, factored in a week of autonomy, and I need a shocking amount of batteries and solar panels. I got 2 eg4-LL's (v2) and 1 6500ex inverter + the 6 slot rack. $5500 for a bit of battery backup to start, and I'll add solar and more batteries as I go. Our main power plant is now shut down and they say we'll have blackouts this summer. Wish me luck.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
It is a shocking amount for sure. Just keep building it one piece at a time. Good luck.
@yagatov
@yagatov 3 ай бұрын
@@CountryLivingExperience Good luck: all of our main power plants may soon die, in which case we all must be self-(solar) powered. So it seems.I am nowhere near that, as yet in S Louisiana.
@Rainbownites
@Rainbownites Жыл бұрын
Using solar for heat is crazy unless u uave a surplus of solar. It is very ineffecient when it comes to heat. Wood, coal, propane, and gas are the way to go for heat. Without the heat production many can get by on only 2-5 kw per day. So 1-2 of those $1600 batteries is a great syart. Nothing wrong with having 9 though. Have to save up 😅 like the last comment mentioned, adding solar panels can often be cheaper than more batteries to get you started and help cover. Your AC needs on the hottest days.
@jasonsharpbucks
@jasonsharpbucks 5 ай бұрын
the water heater is probably only kicking on 1 of the elements to maintain when not in use so 2500 watts, but yea heat pump water heater would be worth it
@ricksanchez2090
@ricksanchez2090 Жыл бұрын
72 degrees is overkill, if 65 is too cold then you need to buy more blankets.. not to mention the part where a wood stove installed would cost about the same as 1 of your batteries and would add a lot of resilience and utility to your property unless you have no trees.
@offgridliving4128
@offgridliving4128 Жыл бұрын
I’m in the exact same boat. Use more power then the 3.65kw of panels can provide. I have the 6 rack of Lifepower4’s. My shunt shows that I use somewhere around 175- 200ah a night. Last few days here in Post Oregon we’ve been socked in with freezing fog and have been running the generator during the day to keep up.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Keep adding to your array. I will be doing that soon. The more the better for sure.
@offgridliving4128
@offgridliving4128 Жыл бұрын
@@CountryLivingExperience yep NAWS had a 9% sale a few months ago so I bought another 3.65kw of panels and another charger controller. Just need county to hurry up with my permits.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Awesome!
@kevinmortensen7825
@kevinmortensen7825 8 ай бұрын
Awesome explanation!!! I'm just lost on how to do this for my ice cream truck here in hawaii😮...I need 10000 watts surge power..but only 8000 watts running...and the most I need it for is 8 hours. I need help...I need help...I'm dumb...lol...Mahalo for all your info..love your channel!!
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 8 ай бұрын
Thank you. You just need an inverter that can handle 10kw or two inverters that can handle 5kw. Mobile platforms are very different. There is a channel that is called Explorist Life. They do a lot of solar installs in vans and RV's. You may find some valuable info there.
@kevinmortensen7825
@kevinmortensen7825 8 ай бұрын
M A H A L O !!!@@CountryLivingExperience
@hubertdaugherty8986
@hubertdaugherty8986 Жыл бұрын
Well done sir.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@fabriglas
@fabriglas Жыл бұрын
Is there a system that can be used to manage solar and mains to charge the batteries when it's cheap and no solar available
@alfheib
@alfheib 10 ай бұрын
Have you considered outing wind turbine to your system.. what's nice about wind turbines is they don't need sunlight to work so its 3 in the morning every storm that comes in and I started turning you're making power.. your way that you can add a water turbine to the system.. what was the other two ways that you can get power to your system without running a generator to charge everything.. probably the least expensive out of all those would be the wind turbines
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 10 ай бұрын
I have not considered it since I do not live in a windy area. It would not be money well spent here.
@johnd3557
@johnd3557 Жыл бұрын
I kind of feel better about my heat pumps now lol. We have a 2400 sq foot home 2 42k BTU outdoor condensers and 7 indoor air handler mini splits and with it being 20-30 degrees outside we have been using right around 3KWH overnight for heat that was with the fridge, freezer, 100 gallon fish tank with 3 filters running and a heater plus various other appliances, security lights / landscaping lights as well.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
3kwh is not bad for all of that.
@johnd3557
@johnd3557 Жыл бұрын
@@CountryLivingExperience yea Im surprised your mr cools are using that much for heat. I have the Mitsubishi hyper heat. Have to see what they use when its down in the single or negative digits but anything is cheaper than oil even if it goes up to 6KWH a hour sure beats the current price of $6 a gallon for home heating fuel.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
For sure. Fuel oil is out of control. We used to have it in Michigan years ago.
@Interglacial_optimist
@Interglacial_optimist Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video I was wondering if you could do a summary section at the end so people who aren't necessarily watching the video and are listening often miss sections and so miss the actual numbers and then I start searching for specific numbers and I never find it so then I give up.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Good suggestion. I will try to do that on future videos. I did put the time codes for the different chapters of the video in the video description.
@arnelcruz581
@arnelcruz581 5 ай бұрын
Thank you sir for the very informative video about off-grid solar and sizing. I have one question sir, will the battery while being charged in the daytime also supply power to the house load when the solar power becomes insufficient?
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 5 ай бұрын
You're welcome. Yes, that is how the system works when you have batteries.
@Absynthexx1
@Absynthexx1 Жыл бұрын
Here are some numbers to compare to his usage overnight. This guy's house used 28.5 kWh over a roughly 8 to 10 hour period. He ran some mini-splits for heating, old water heater, and fridges+freezers. I analyzed my previous house electricity usage in order to get a ballpark of what I would use and what I may need. My 1500 sq ft house used an average of 11.35 kWh per day during a 10 month period. I excluded July and August because I like my AC and I kept those numbers separate based on heavy AC usage or little/no AC. My toasty summer months average was 24.3 kWh per day. That's everything including the central air. I think the video author here is using a lot more electricity than he thinks for this test. Disclaimers regarding my house electricity usage: Heat and cooking was gas; no one was home during work hours so just the 1 fridge was running. Off hours was pretty typical use of a few lights plus big TV plus computer. For the AC, like I said I love my AC and I keep it cranked up during the summer. I want to say I set it maybe to 68 and leave it on all the time.
@timb7814
@timb7814 Жыл бұрын
So you had no heating load, no 2nd fridge, no freezers, no heated dog bed, no electric hot water tank. Hmmm... no wonder your consumption was significantly lower than that shown in this video!
@Absynthexx1
@Absynthexx1 Жыл бұрын
@@timb7814 you've just proved how much energy he wastes converting electricity to heat. He talks about his energy usage as if it is minimal when he is in reality burning watt-hours despite everyone being asleep in their beds. He is a living meme of the dog in the burning room with his coffee mug saying 'this is fine'.
@jenniwitzel
@jenniwitzel Жыл бұрын
Yeah I was thinking the same this 😅😂
@1987FX16
@1987FX16 7 ай бұрын
I mean the fact that OP doesn't have a whole home/individual circuit shunt/hall battery monitor system tells me this guy is just a keyboard worrier spreading forum information. Immediate red flag.
@leedog168
@leedog168 8 ай бұрын
Great explanation, thanks
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience 8 ай бұрын
You're welcome
@PatricksDIY
@PatricksDIY Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised with all the stuff you got, that none of it was a Sense, or an emporia Vue, to monitor your energy. That was the best way for us to discover our usage and specific appliance draws
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
I do now. I did a video on the Emporia. I had never heard of those monitoring systems before making this video.
@guaranimike
@guaranimike Жыл бұрын
Thank you Eric, very practical and useful info. I encourage people to access your excellent history of videos. We have your exact system except with only six batteries, all from Signature Solar. Our order of use/drain is the same; Solar, batteries, then grid as backup. We are also working towards whole house coverage. Referring back to your wiring video, our system is not connected yet because I'm unclear on using/wiring a sub panel and how that is wired to the main panel for the stated objective. Electricians here in East TN tend to shy away from solar. Can you point us to more detailed info on this?
@americagerzsenyi6911
@americagerzsenyi6911 Жыл бұрын
Hello Eric, I would like the same education as Mike Hamer because here in South Texas electricians and my husband shy away from solar too. I'm trying to ve brave and follow your lead. I understand what's coming, but to my family I am a little on the doom side as the say. Thank you for all your efforts. God bless you and your family. You have an open door home here in Sugar Land.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
You're welcome and thank you for suggesting our videos. From the sub-panel where the two hot conductors (1 from each EG4's) land on 1 double pole breaker. Then I just run bigger conductors from the sub panel (2 hots, a neutral, and a ground) to the main panel. Land the neutral and grounds on their appropriate bar and the two hots on another 70A double pole breaker. Which video did you watch specifically? I think I have a closeup shot of the sub panel and the main in one of them.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
@America Gerzsenyi Thank you. God bless you as well.
@guaranimike
@guaranimike Жыл бұрын
@@CountryLivingExperience It was this video: "EG4 Inverter Installation Full System Wiring And Tips!" Off Grid Solar! Beginning at 15:52 "...AC out lines to load center which is subpanel...safety switch then back to main panel..." So it looks like I may need to migrate most breakers I want for "daily use" to my sub-panel/load center. I failed to mention we are at the same time installing the same system on my son's house. No need to answer, Eric. I will pay closer attention to info you have provided. May our Lord bless you and your precious family.
@julientomasi3174
@julientomasi3174 5 ай бұрын
hi Thanks for sharing. If I may : You totally forgot the number 1 thing to do : ISOLATE your house. You could divide per 10 the amount of electricty needed for your heating. I live in a 300m2 house, well isolated, and almost have no need for heating. A stove might also be , on e your house is correctly isolated, a much more efficient - and cost effective - and ecological - solution - than putting - 50kWH of lithium battery. Best regards
@leifdaddow
@leifdaddow Жыл бұрын
Hi, Tyler resident here. I would love to talk to you about your system one on one if you are available sometime. Enjoy your videos a lot
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Hello and thank you. I wave been trying to get a meetup together with some other KZfaqrs someplace close to Tyler but have not had the time. I am happy to talk on email or facebook and answer any questions you may have.
@Beako157
@Beako157 Жыл бұрын
If your system logs current draw, the water heater will stick out on the graph as a big spike.
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the heads up.
@lexkruit6775
@lexkruit6775 Жыл бұрын
I have a question for you, do you mind sharing how you hooked up your inverter out put power in a breaker box. Thanks for your help! I have a similar off grid solar system by I have only the 3 kw (EG4) inverters and thinking about upgrading to the ones you have. Thanks in advance for your help. 👍
@CountryLivingExperience
@CountryLivingExperience Жыл бұрын
Of course. Did you watch our installation videos for this system? If not check them out here...kzfaq.info/get/bejne/Y5unacWQl7LcpIU.html, kzfaq.info/get/bejne/ndRxZ5erm7a9qZ8.html
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